Irreligious Musings from the "Cabin"
I just started reading Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Whether it was God or me, I’m not sure, but for some reason it’s been in my head to read it for a few months now and that idea stuck. On a side-note, sometimes I notice that’s how God speaks to me. A thought occurs to me, origin unknown, and unrelated to whatever I had been thinking about at the time, and no matter how many times I get distracted from it, or in cases where it’s an unwelcome thought, try to push it away, it never leaves. It just hangs there patiently and expectantly until one day I put it together and realize its been God all along, but that’s a post for another time.
I’m only about halfway through the book, which I’m reading online via Project Gutenberg, but I am completely absorbed in the storyline. I’ve been struck by several passages along the way, and one in particular captured my attention.
To emphasis it’s impact I’ll give a bit of context. Uncle Tom, the devout, loyal, and humble slave has been sold (apart from his wife and three children) to a family in New Orleans. The “master” of the family is a good-natured and kind man by the name of Augustine St. Clare who has the misfortune of being married to a selfish and callous woman named Marie. Marie attends church (when not suffering from her frequent “illnesses”) because it is the proper thing to do in society and she fancies herself quite pious. Sr. Clare does not. This particular day she has just arrived home and is apprising him of the particulars of a most agreeable sermon in which the preacher has explained away all the evils of slavery by pronouncing the “distinctions in society” as a reflection of God’s ordering of the universe.